Macrame 67 Vesuvio

Familial Flourishes

Macrame 67 Vesuvio
Macrame 67 Vesuvio by Giovanni de Maio

Founded in 1826, Ceramica Giovanni de Maio proudly preserves the tradition of artisanal production of hand-made and hand-decorated majolica and terracotta tiles.

Macrame 24 by Giovanni de Maio
Macrame 24 by Giovanni de Maio

This is tile making of the old school. The plain tiles are coloured with a brush or a sponge; while the exquisite decorative pieces are produced using a stencil or painted by hand.

Le Tele by Francesco Raimondi
Le Tele, designed by Francesco Raimondi, for Giovanni de Maio

Giovanni de Maio’s portfolio is distinguished by the variety of eye-catching designs and the subtle glaze crazing which adds particular charm to this company’s products.

Hotel Tritone, Praiano
Hotel Tritone, Praiano, on the Amalfi coast

Giovanni de Maio has been carefully nurtured by the same family for four generations and continues the timeless tradition of producing ceramic tiles with Mediterranean luminosity to this day.

Gino Sorbillo Pizzeria Naples
Gino Sorbillo Pizzeria, Via Partenope, Naples

The founder, Giovanni de Maio, hailed from Ogliara, a town near the Amalfi coast on the slopes of mount Stella that is synonymous with the Italy’s ceramics sector.   Here the vital raw materials for the production of Neapolitan Cotto, particularly local clays, are quarried.

Hotel Tritone, Praiano
Hotel Tritone, Praiano, on the Amalfi coast

The company’s first clients came from the local aristocracy who greatly admired both the warm, pinkish colour of the local clay, and also the deft artistic flourishes of Giovanni de Maio.

Jamie Oliver's Italian Trattoria, Chelmsford
Jamie Oliver’s Italian Trattoria, Chelmsford

In the post-war period Giovanni’s son, Domenico, started to develop new decorations using glazed bisque and more complex surface decoration.  In Ogliara, the company could draw on a pool of highly skilled artisans, well versed in the Vietrese tradition. Carefully-controlled modernisation of the production processes allowed the company to expand from an artisanal operation into a craft-based factory-focused industry.  Diesel-fuelled tunnel kilns were installed, allowing decorated floor to be produced side-by-side with cotto.

Ristorante Acquapazza,
Ristorante Acquapazza, Cetara, Italy

In 1950s and β€˜60s Giovanni De Maio became synonymous with Artistic Ceramics Vietrese, and greatly benefitted from Italy’s economic expansion and design-based economy.

Relais Don Alfonso 1890, Sant'Agata
Relais Don Alfonso 1890, Sant’Agata

Now located in Fisciano, near Salerno, Giovanni de Maio has not lost its soul.  Indeed, moving to a location with better logistics has done much to ensure a successful future for Domenico and his sons, Giovanni, Antonio and Elio.

Giovanni de Maio

A new post by Joe Simpson, Diary of a Tile Addict, April 2017.

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